nichols, at that point, 22, 23 minutes passed and another seven, eight minutes before they bring out a gurney, about a half hour, john, roughly where you have somebody who is critically ill. we know now that he was, you know, had all these various injuries, and he s very not getting any medical care at all at that point. and that was obviously concerning. but when you watch the beating the assault, i watched this with some other medical examiners around country and talking to colleagues all night about this, there s so many mechanisms of injury he seems to have suffered here, a lot of people pay attention to the head injuries, he was kicked in the head, punched in the face and head several times, he seemed to be coming in and out of consciousness when leaned up against that vehicle, which could be, we don t know for sure could be a sign he was starting to develop brain swelling, brain is the only organ in body when it as well as it has nowhere to
these cases over your remarkable career, ted, all right. recklessly driving. all right. it s disproportionate to the act or the so-called criminal act if there was such a thing going on. i counted just watching the video, when i did, multiple sometimes that, you know, he was taser shocked, pepper sprayed, kicked, punched, batoned on the head, kicked in the head at these four times, i might point out, four times and i might have missed it, to say nothing of shoveled and constantly verbally abused and cursed at. you know, it just doesn t make sense. people watching this are saying, all right, this separate unit, this so-called scorpion unit which these officers were members, i know it s been suspended for the time being, it was an elite unit to deal with serious crime, i get that. it s been suspended and hoping these five officers were
home depot when black lives matter descended on him and shot him. [horn blowing] what the [bleep] are you cooking? gunshot] [engine revving] what the heck? later that summer, are portland man was beaten by a mob, kicked in the head after they forced his truck to crash. [[bleep] [bleep] [bleep] loser. [bleep] jesse: what would do you if you found yourself in that situation? do you wait it out and hope for the best or do you protect yourself and hit the gas? oh. oh. ing.
and he exhibited odd, even threatening behavior. you ll hear shortly from a woman who survived the shooting and the chilling moments she lived through. all of this comes as a suspect in another mass shooting appeared in court for the first time today via video accused of shooting and killing five people and wounding 19 more at an lgbtq club in colorado. anderson aldrich, did you watch the video concerning your constitutional rights in this case? yes. do you have any questions about those rights? [ no response ] no. the 22-year-old suspect was released from the hospital, booked into the el paso county jail. you can see here in the booking photo, those facial bruises. the suspect was tackled, kicked in the head, beaten with a handgun by heroic patrons that
lived lived with his mom across the hall where krause lived with his girlfriend. and the suspect clearly bruised and batsetered around the head. they were taken down by rich fee arrow and then kicked in the head by a young naval officer and a trans woman. now thanksgiving today and a little bit of resilience from club q, they would always hold a thanksgiving dinner. this was more than a nightclub. this is a hub for the lgbtq community here in colorado springs. they re holding their thanksgiving lunch not in the club because it is a crime scene. they will be holding it elsewhere, but they will be missing key parts. daniel and derek, bartenders, described as the glue that held the kplucommunity together. they will not be at lunch today.